Microsoft Finally Ends Windows XP and Office 2003 Support

Posted by Nathan Kirsch| Tue, Apr 08, 2014 - 4:54 PM

Microsoft officially ended support of Windows XP and Office 2003 today, meaning that the software is now basically outdated. The operating system is now 12 years old, so Microsoft is no longer providing security updates that patch holes in the software. The danger now is that hackers who find bugs in XP will be able to exploit them freely.

Windows XP was released on October 25, 2001. It received three major updates: Service Pack 1 (on September 9, 2002), Service Pack 2 (on August 25, 2004), and Service Pack 3 (April 21, 2008). On April 14, 2009, Microsoft retired Mainstream Support for XP, meaning security updates were still available but free technical support, warranty claims, and design changes stopped being offered. The company today retired Extended Support for the operating system.

Does this mean that Windows XP is wide open to cyberattacks and other bad things? Microsoft has said it will continue to update its antimalware signatures and engine for Windows XP until July 14, 2015, but they will regularly warn users that the operating system itself is no longer secure. Basically, it is in your best interest to retire your Windows XP machines to something like Windows 8.1. Microsoft 8.1 ironically got its first major update today as well. Microsoft is delivering the Windows 8.1 Update through the traditional Windows Update method, rather than through the Windows Store (as it did with the original Windows 8.1 release). Unless you’ve disabled automatic updates in your PC settings, the Windows 8.1 Update should download and install on its own.

Long live Windows XP!

Robert Stevenson

My Computer with Windows XP will not boot up. Can anyone tell what could be wrong?

Musafir_86

-I know an operating system is a complex piece of software, and it’s hard to make sure that there’s no security bugs at all, but after *more than 12 years of patching*, why can’t XP security holes be reduced to nil?

-By excluding unimportant/non-core files, I guess the total critical parts (including the kernel, Windows Explorer, networking stack) are less than 100MB of binary files (EXE, DLL, SYS), right? Or they aren’t?